On November 24 - 27, 2004,
complainants Anjelica Kieltyka, "Juanita", and Lynn Conway received letters from
Provost
Lawrence B. Dumas of Northwestern University (the letter to "Juanita" is
included later in this posting). In these letters, Northwestern announced
the conclusion of its initial investigation of Mr. Bailey. However, as you will
see, they did so without revealing either the investigation's findings or the
actions taken in response to those findings. Instead, the findings and actions
are cloaked in secrecy:

"I have now
received the formal report of the committee charged to investigate the
matter; and I have taken action that I believe is appropriate in this
situation."

- Lawrence B. Dumas,
Provost, Northwestern University

We are now investigating and
evaluating this response by Northwestern University (NU), and are also reaching out to gain a
sense of the trans community's feelings about this cover-up
by Northwestern. We feel the investigation's findings and the actions taken by NU
regarding Mr. Bailey's scientific, ethical and sexual misconduct should be a
matter of public record. Once we've had time to
gather inputs and evaluate this situation further, we will release any
additional details and our analysis.

Some unanswered questions that we are
pondering and that journalists might investigate:

1. Was Bailey's book
based on what he terms his "scientific research"?

2. Were "Juanita" and
Anjelica Kieltyka his research subjects?

3. And if so, did Mr.
Bailey fail to get informed consent from them to be research subjects
and have their case studies reported in his book?

4. Given that the
answers to 1, 2, 3 are Yes to all, based on the evidence---yes,
Bailey was writing based on his own interviews with human subjects;
yes, Bailey was using "Juanita" and Angelica as his research subjects;
and yes, he failed to get informed consent from them to use their
stories in his book, what
steps has NU taken to insure that such misconduct will not occur
again in the future?

5. How are other
universities going to learn from NU's experience so that they can
improve their protocols for research integrity, so as to avoid
fiascos like the Bailey case, especially if NU completely conceals their
findings, sanctions and procedural changes?

6. What is NU going
to do about the compelling charges and evidence that Bailey had
sex with one of his research subjects? Anything? Or are they
going to be like the Air Force Academy, and just ignore such
charges as if they didn't exist, signaling other faculty members
that having sex with research subjects is perfectly "OK".

We were informed
by Northwestern's
Office of Research Integrity on July 6,
2003 that the reason for not forwarding the charge of sex
with a research subject was that the committee would first
have had to confirm that the complainant "Juanita" was a
research subject. Presumably if this were determined to be
so, then the sex complaint would come back under
investigation. However, as we now see, we are not going to
be told whether or not the committee determined if "Juanita"
and Anjelica Kieltyka were research subjects.

On reflection, our early reactions to
Northwestern University's announcement can be characterized as stunned
amazement: The suppression of the investigation findings, and the
subsequent actions (if any) reveals that
Northwestern apparently doesn't have a clue how to handle the embarrassing and shameful
situation that Mr. Bailey has put them in. If they openly expose the results of
the investigation, they will either be (i) shamed further by having done an
obvious whitewash of compelling charges and evidence, or (ii) they will have to
admit that "elite science" is sometimes flawed and is not the perfect and trustworthy
institution that so many within it have claimed as the case unfolded. It
is particularly astounding that the complainants in this matter have not been
apprised of the detailed findings and any resulting actions.

As the Catholic Church for
decades cloaked in secrecy their "investigation" of child sexual abuse by priests,
Northwestern has now cloaked in secrecy its "investigation" of sexual, ethical and
scientific abuse of transsexual women - saying what amounts to "Trust us. Take
out word for it. We've corrected whatever problems there might have been..."

The Bailey case (especially given the
concealment by Northwestern of the investigation results) is destined
to be seen by ethicists, scholars, overseers of research integrity and
historians of science as a major milestone in the widespread exposure of the transphobia now rampant in the elite institutions in our society. Exposed
are the horrific defamations that institutions such as Northwestern University
and the National Academies launched against trans women in the name of "science"
and then defended in the name of "science".
The vivid, detailed record of the Bailey case is now all there, widely and
openly accessible on the internet, for student and scholars to study.

================================
North Western to discipline
J Michael Bailey in secret

News report by Christine Burns
================================

CHICAGO Illinois - 29th November 2004

North Western University Professor J Michael Bailey is to be disciplined
in an unspecified manner, according to letters sent this week to trans
women who had complained about his behaviour.

The Professor, whose book "The Man Who Would Be Queen" caused an
international furore when published in March 2003, faced multiple
complaints from several transsexual women. Many of these contended that
he had made them into his research subjects without their knowing or
written consent, when they though he was simply writing surgery referral
letters for them. One of the women also alleged that he had had sex with
her whilst participating in what she later realised to be a possible
research project.

The exact findings of the NWU complaints investigation are seemingly to
remain a secret. With a degree of evasion which has stunned US trans
observers, University Provost Lawrence B Dumas avoids giving any clue as
to what the investigating committee actually concluded after more than a
years's deliberation. A letter received this weekend by complainant
Professor Lynn Conway is practically identical to those also being
received by the women who claimed to have been his unwitting research
subjects. It states,

"Your July 29, 2003, complaint has been thoroughly
investigated, following Northwestern University's
established procedures for handling such matters.
I have now received the formal report of the committee
charged to investigate the matter; and I have taken
action that I believe is appropriate in this situation.
Consistent with the established procedures pertaining
to such matters and general University practice,
personnel actions concerning University employees are
confidential. Northwestern remains committed to
ensuring that research activities involving human
subjects are conducted in accordance with the
expectations of the University, the regulations and
guidelines established by the federal government and
with generally accepted research standards.

Professor Conway was quick to condemn the statement:

"...it's a kind-of Catholic Church type of "Cover-Up",
a retreat into total secrecy about their findings, and
from telling the public what they're going to do about
those findings"

She adds,

"Here we have the elite science establishment simply
saying to those were abused by rogue scientists, like
the Catholic Church said to those who were abused by
rogue priests, "trust us, we've investigated and we've
taken care of it"...when in fact they never even looked
at the most serious charges."

Although the committee's findings haven't been revealed, it is
nevertheless clear that Professor Bailey has not been exonerated. Had
the investigating committee found him innocent of the charges made in
the complaints, it is inconceivable that they would have passed up the
opportunity to say so. Institutions only adopt this kind of tight lipped
approach when they are extremely embarassed and hope that the problem
will go away. In this case observers say the only logical conclusion
they can draw is that the committee DID find Bailey to be at fault, but
found the consequences of condemning his behaviour to be overwhelmingly
embarassing to confront.

Why might that be?

One good clue lies in the complaint which WASN'T investigated. The
allegation of sex with a research subject has not actually been
considered by the university's investigating panel, since the first task
was to establish whether the woman making the allegation was a research
subject or not.

Conway says that by failing to spell out the conclusions of the
investigating panel the university hopes to avoid the obligation to
investigate this second serious issue, which could continue embarassing
them even further.

Moreover, for a university reliant on contentious US Government funding,
the "was it research" question is considered by other observers to be
highly embarassing in its own right...

Since its publication in March 2003, gender identity experts, trans
academics and scientists from many backgrounds have joined in condemning
J Michael Bailey's book as bad science and dangerous drivel. In peer
review terms Bailey's only fans come from the small clique of
eugenically-inspired "bio ethics" researchers, who expected his book to
further their stigmatising aims.

At first Bailey claimed it to be a serious science book about his
research. When the condemnations started coming, however, he hastily
changed tack and claimed that the book was a popular work about his
exploits trawling gay bars as part of his interest in the field. Had the
investigating committee found that the subjects featured in his gay bar
antics WERE research subjects however (ignoring the ones he made up),
funders would be even more inclined to think very hard about how he has
been spending their money all this time. A case of "Research Jim, but
not as we know it".

Meanwhile, there are still more complaints in the system, regarding
further alleged acts of unprofessional conduct, so the professor is
certainly not out of the woods yet.

For US-based researchers the refusal of the authorities to state their
findings in this case will leave a big question mark over what
constitutes "research" with human subjects, and what kinds of human
research require informed written consent. This is a very serious
question affecting far more than J Michael Bailey's sexploits, and some
might have hoped a prestige university like North Western to take this
opportunity to provide some answers.

For trans people around the world the "non-findings" are a huge
disappointment too...

The latina trans women who just wanted a referral letter and got an
unwanted place in a controversial book have been denied a reasonable
outcome to their complaint. All they know is that a secret committee
looked at their cases in secret and the university's provost reports
that they came to a secret conclusion. They are denied the right to know
that conclusion or to know whether the sanctions taken are reasonable or
not. No reasonable person would describe that as a meaningful complaints
process. It is a denial of due process. Nobody knows yet whether, as a
result, they will take their complaints to law or not.

For the rest of us, the result is also very frustrating .. in an affair
where, above all, people most likely just want to see closure.

Many may choose to read between the lines and deduce that the moral
victory has already been won in any case. The University would not have
hesitated to say if it believed that J Michael Bailey was innocent of
the allegations made. The only reasonable conclusion, therefore, is that
he is considered at least partly culpable. Some might be disappointed
not to know the disciplinary outcome -- a loss of tenure, a fine, a
written warning? Who knows? That's speculation.

What we DO know, however, is that other complaint allegations still have
to be heard .. the issues are so serious that they still remain
confidential .. and that this is a story which will continue to play out
for months (if not years to come) .. so watch that space over there.

- Christine Burns

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rights campaign.
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